2012
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201203795
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Fibrous Nanostructures from the Self‐Assembly of Designed Repeat Protein Modules

Abstract: Single-protein-chain superhelical filaments are obtained from monomeric repeat proteins by controlling the chemistry and solvent exposure at their terminal interfaces. The assembly was achieved in aqueous solution, at neutral pH value, and at room temperature. The building block was a recombinantly engineered designed tetratricopeptide repeat protein. Directed head-to-tail self-assembly was driven by genetically encoded orthogonal native chemical ligation.

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Cited by 35 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…These self-assembly properties have been recently exploited to generate different CTPR-based assemblies, including hydrogels, nanofibres and thin films ( Figure 2) [38][39][40][41]. Protein thin nanofibres were obtained taking advantage of the head-to-tail interactions between proteins to drive the polymerization of the CTPR units ( Figure 2).…”
Section: Supramolecular Assemblies Based On Repeat Proteinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These self-assembly properties have been recently exploited to generate different CTPR-based assemblies, including hydrogels, nanofibres and thin films ( Figure 2) [38][39][40][41]. Protein thin nanofibres were obtained taking advantage of the head-to-tail interactions between proteins to drive the polymerization of the CTPR units ( Figure 2).…”
Section: Supramolecular Assemblies Based On Repeat Proteinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Protein thin nanofibres were obtained taking advantage of the head-to-tail interactions between proteins to drive the polymerization of the CTPR units ( Figure 2). Specific reactivities are introduced at both N-and C-terminal ends of the proteins in different ways to act as staple of the interaction [39,40]. The detailed characterization and modelling of the step growth polymerization process will allow to achieve full control in the fibre formation [39] and the generation of nanorods of defined lengths.…”
Section: Supramolecular Assemblies Based On Repeat Proteinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…are indicated by different shaped pieces. Examples of published triggers for association are (A and H) chemical-induced polymerization of CTPR modules using native chemical ligation and disulfide bond formation [27,28], (B and H) metal-induced polymerization using minimized β-roll motifs on addition of La 2 + [30], (C and I) thick film formation after large, rigid super-helical 18 CTPR module proteins were deposited on a teflon surface with a plasticizer and left to dry (rectangles of alternating blue and green of three module units denote the extending super-helix [31]), (D and J) hydrogel formation of the same CTPR18 combining with multivalent cognate peptide-PEG cross-linker (pink circles on black lines) [26], (E and K) reversible gelation of a chimera of a leucine zipper (black and red rectangles) with designed minimized β-roll motifs. On addition of Ca 2 + (yellow circles) the minimized β-roll motifs fold (green squares) from unstructured polypeptides and oligomerize [32].…”
Section: Figure 4 Designing the Self-assembly Of Repeat Proteinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exploiting these properties, one can extend the modular design process from individual repeat proteins to the assembly of repeat proteins into novel biomaterials with encoded properties and precisely displayed functional sites. To date, examples of this exciting field includes using metals, peptide binding, native chemical ligation and disulfide bonding to assemble repeat proteins into gels, films and fibres (Figure 4) [26][27][28]. One interesting design aspect that is peculiar to linear repeat proteins is the potential to change the shape of the super-helix (curvature, twist, pitch).…”
Section: Future Directions: Repeat-protein Design and Assemblymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The length (and thus mass) is controlled by the number of repeat motifs used. 29 A whole library of repeat proteins has been developed by Plückthun and coworkers. Their designed ankyrin repeat proteins (DARPins) con-sist of ankyrin repeat modules with different numbers of repeats and end caps on the C-and the N-terminus.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%